Betty Kennedy
Betty Margaret Hannah Kennedy OC (née Styran; January 4, 1926 – March 20, 2017) was a Canadian broadcaster, journalist, author, and Senator. She is best known for her work on radio and television. BiographyBorn and raised in Ottawa, Ontario, the daughter of Walter Herbert Styran and Janet Kincaid (McPhee) Styran,[1] Kennedy graduated from Lisgar Collegiate Institute, and began her career with the Ottawa Citizen. She became a broadcaster, as a host of a local radio show, during a newspaper strike.[2] She was soon hired away by CFRB in Toronto where she became host of The Betty Kennedy Show in 1959; the daily interview and public affairs show remained on the air for 27 years with Kennedy interviewing 25,000 guests ranging from Pierre Trudeau to Debbie Reynolds.[3] In 1962, she joined the panel of the current affairs quiz show Front Page Challenge on CBC Television, remaining with the show until it went off the air in 1995.[4] She wrote two books: Gerhard: A love story (1975), about her late first husband, and Hurricane Hazel (1979). Kennedy also had a vital career as an Executive Producer for television. Her series, Insight with Betty Kennedy, aired on TV Ontario (OECA) during the early 1970s. Robert Gardner, who worked with Kennedy as a studio director on the series, said of her: "She was remarkable. We would tape five half hour interviews live-to-tape in a single day. She would prep each of the sessions with very prominent guests and would flawlessly interview them. Often there was only a space of fifteen minutes between each program. There were no re-takes and not a single chance for error." She also executive-produced Leave this Not to Cain (narrated by Pierre Berton), This Vibrant Land, and she hosted An Eye for Eternity (the international fine arts exhibition at Montreal). Kennedy's first husband, businessman Gerhard Kennedy, died of cancer in 1975. Her second husband was G. Allan Burton (1915–2002), CEO and Chairman of now defunct Simpsons department stores.[5][6] She was appointed to the Senate by Prime Minister Jean Chrétien on June 20, 2000. She retired less than six months later on her 75th birthday. Kennedy resided in Campbellville, Ontario, near Milton, Ontario with Burton.[7] Kennedy died on March 20, 2017, aged 91. Kennedy was named to both the Canadian Broadcast Hall of Fame and the Canadian News Hall of Fame and was made an Officer of the Order of Canada in 1982.[4] Re: "Kennedy graduated from Lisgar Collegiate Institute, and began her career with the Ottawa Citizen. She became a broadcaster, as a host of a local radio show, during a newspaper strike.[2] She was soon hired away by CFRB in Toronto where she became host of The Betty Kennedy Show..." This portion of the Biography is pure fiction. Betty never graduated from high school: she dropped out at age sixteen to become, first, a copyboy at the Ottawa Citizen, and eventually a bylined journalist for the paper. It's true she briefly did some radio work during a linotype operators' strike; but she returned to the paper as soon as the strike was over. This was in the 1940s, and she wouldn't have been considered a broadcaster at that time, either by herself or anybody else. Her next employment was as a Fashion Coordinator at Bruck Mills in Montreal; following this, she became the first woman Public Relations Officer for CIL in Toronto (c. 1948). It wasn't until the early 1950s in Calgary that she began seriously doing radio work, in the form of a "weekly panel discussion program on current events, along with two other panelists, Fred Colborn, a member of the provincial Parliament, and Dr. Morris Carnat, a prominent psychiatrist." [Betty Kennedy, Vignettes From a Life, p. 60] Back in Ottawa, circa 1958, Betty briefly worked at the "CBOT Studio doing the This and That TV show" [ibid., p. 72], which she wrote and presented; but Toronto radio station CFRB didn't 'hire her away' from this or any other job. Betty approached CFRB in 1959 with an idea for a show that "did not fit in with their programming" [ibid., p. 74]. However, while CFRB was lukewarm about her project they were impressed by her, and they were looking for a woman broadcaster. When they offered her this job she accepted, and that was the beginning of The Betty Kennedy Show. Honours
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